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Nov 15, 2019 · Photos from history: Kansas family murdered in cold blood. On Nov. 15, 1959, four members of the Clutter family of Holcomb, Kansas, were found murdered in their home. The brutal farmhouse slayings in which the victims were bound and shot, gripped the nation and shattered its sense of security.
Images. The Clutter Family. Herb, Bonnie, Nancy and Kenyon. Richard "Dick" Hickock and Perry Smith. The Clutter house and Crime Scenes. Evidence. The Clutter Family Funerals and Graves. CrimeArchives: Famous Trials and Infamous Killers: Links, photos, maps, sketches, videos and more.
AMC and SundanceTV present LIAR, Top of the Lake: China Girl, Cold Blooded: The Clutter Family Murders, and AMC Visionaries. Browse Getty Images' premium collection of high-quality, authentic Clutter Family Murders stock photos, royalty-free images, and pictures. Clutter Family Murders stock photos are available in a variety of sizes and ...
- The surviving relatives of Bonnie Clutter who hated In Cold Blood because it portrayed her as emotionally impaired weren’t necessarily just being defensive.
- The family of killer Richard Hickock tried to make amends once Dick turned into a petty criminal. They would give a gift of a horse to parties he had wronged.
- Although she didn’t appear on camera, one of Herb and Bonnie Clutter’s granddaughters gave voice interviews to the documentary makers. It’s surprising because her mother, Eveanna Mosier — Nancy and Kenyon’s older sister — shunned the press and never liked In Cold Blood.
- As a child, Perry Smith sustained a severe penile injury when a nun hit him with a flashlight. The book made mention of other nun-inflicted abuse at school because Smith was a bed wetter — but it never revealed anything quite as perverse.
- During His First Stay in Prison, Smith Was Busted For Contraband.
- During His First Stint in Prison, Hickock Worked at The Tag Factory.
- Smith Went on A Hunger Strike in The First Year of His Second sentence.
- During His Second sentence, Hickock Took Courses on The Bible.
- Hickock Was A College Football Fan.
- Harper Lee Wanted to correspond with Smith.
- Hickock Told His Life Story to Someone Other Than Capote.
- They Really, Really Wanted Radios.
- Capote Sent Smith Magazines.
- Smith Wanted to Paint A Portrait of The Warden.
A search of Cell 228 on March 6, 1957, when Smith was behind bars for burglary, revealed: Smith pleaded guilty to having the items, but told officer E. Golden that he was “of a creative nature and likes to build things … The roulette wheel was for his own amusement in order to figure out percentages.” Though it was the first report for Smith in the...
His duties included “taking paint off the machine and placing it on the conveyor, also is an extra operator when one is needed,” reported E.G. Peters, supervisor of the tag factory, on May 27, 1959. “This man requires little supervision. His quality of work, dependability and attitude is above average.” His work was good enough that earlier that ye...
Kansas Memory After going on a “self-induced starvation diet for five (5) months” that left him weighing just 108 pounds, Smith’s doctors recommended he be sent to Larned State Hospital for psychiatric evaluation. In a Special Progress Report dated October 13, 1960, that request was denied: “It would be difficult to transfer the patient that distan...
Because he was on Death Row, Hickock couldn’t go to church—so instead, he participated in Bible Correspondence courses, according to a Special Progress Report from October 7, 1960.
Kansas University, specifically. In a letter to Warden Tracy Hand dated August 15, 1960, Hickock wrote, “It is that time of year when football season is just around the corner. I am quite an ardent fan of the University Kansas … The first game of the season is the 17th of September. Would it be possible for the game of the University of Kansas to b...
Nelle Harper Lee—yes, the author of To Kill A Mockingbird—helped Capote with his research for In Cold Blood. She also visited Hickock and Smith in jail with Capote, and tried to correspond with Smith. In a March 20, 1962 letter to Colonel Guy C. Rexroad, Director of Penal Institutions, lawyer Clifford Hope wrote that Lee “was advised that Perry Smi...
That person was Mack Nations, who wrote an article, "From the Death House A Condemned Killer Tells How He Committed American's Worst Crime in 20,” that was published in the December 1961 issue of Malemagazine. When he discovered that Hickock was also speaking to Capote, Nations was incensed—and sent letters to that effect. "Richard Eugene Hickock g...
Kansas Memory Smith and Hickock repeatedly requested radios for the five men on death row at Kansas State Penitentiary. “Music is soothing to anyone’s nerves,” Hickock wrote in a 9-page letter to Robert J. Kaiser, Director of Penal Institutions, on September 12, 1963. “It keeps the mind off one’s troubles—family, financial, death, etc. A radio is t...
In a September 20, 1964 letter, Smith wrote to Capote “I finally got around to making a perusal of Bogdanovich’s article in the Sept. issue of Esquire which you sent recently. … Thank you for sending along the two outdoor mags … they are much appreciated. But please don’t send me any more … We get many of them here sometimes and it’s a waste of $$—...
In a bizarre letter to Crouse dated October 13, 1964, Smith asked how the warden and the Christmas spirit were "making out," and went on to say, “(smile) I thought that I would like to paint a portrait or two of you if permitted to, and finish some others too, should the art material privileges be returned :(it has been five (5) months now). … Funn...
Nov 22, 2017 · Updated January 02, 2020 1:32 PM. There’s a reddish stain on the basement wall that might be a remnant of Herb Clutter’s blood — or it might be just an urban myth. Getting access to it and the...